To maximize the life of my newly installed Hayward H400FDN heater, I have decided to get the PH under control. Yeah, I know you can just dump acid in the pool, but I
get forgetful...
I bought a Hanna BL100 acid injection system. This has a controller, a peristaltic pump, and a PH sensor. Now, I'm not really sure this will be less work than just dumping
the acid - PH sensors always require babysitting in my experience - but I'm willing to give it a try. Still have to keep testing the water, you can't just leave it on faith.
The Hanna doesn't come with any acid reservoir. So I bought a Pentair acid tub. It's $$$$, but it's made for this application. Has a base that you can screw into the concrete, and some sort of bottle-seal piercer so you can just upend the new jugs of acid into it.
The Hanna also came with a remote see-through cannister for the PH sensor. Two hoses go from the cannister to the pool plumbing, and each one has a turnoff valve. This should allow
me to service the PH sensor without draining the whole equipment pad. I have identified where the PH sensor can go, and also where the acid will be injected - last thing before the water goes back to the pool.
The most complicated thing here is the control for the Hanna. It must NOT inject when the pump is not running. How to figure that out? The E-Command-4 doesn't have any specific output for that. The main pump power is not switched; the E-command-4 talks to the pump via some sort of multi-wire low-voltage protocol. The most straightforward thing would be to tap into the salt system's flow switch. This produces a switch closure when water is flowing.
I don't know if I can just connect the Hanna in parallel with the salt controller ( Hayward Aqua Rite ). The Hanna has a "digital input". No info available beyond that.
Don't know if it's 5V logic or 3.3V or....?
I don't know if the Hayward input is referenced to ground, or floating. I'll figure it out by making a little breakout card to go between the Hayward and the flow switch. Then I can stick a meter on it. The input to the Hayward is a 6p4c ( six places, four contacts ) modular phone connector. There are only two wires in the middle of the connector. I just got a baggie of those connectors from Amazon, and I already have the crimping tool.
I read about the Hanna on this forum...
get forgetful...
I bought a Hanna BL100 acid injection system. This has a controller, a peristaltic pump, and a PH sensor. Now, I'm not really sure this will be less work than just dumping
the acid - PH sensors always require babysitting in my experience - but I'm willing to give it a try. Still have to keep testing the water, you can't just leave it on faith.
The Hanna doesn't come with any acid reservoir. So I bought a Pentair acid tub. It's $$$$, but it's made for this application. Has a base that you can screw into the concrete, and some sort of bottle-seal piercer so you can just upend the new jugs of acid into it.
The Hanna also came with a remote see-through cannister for the PH sensor. Two hoses go from the cannister to the pool plumbing, and each one has a turnoff valve. This should allow
me to service the PH sensor without draining the whole equipment pad. I have identified where the PH sensor can go, and also where the acid will be injected - last thing before the water goes back to the pool.
The most complicated thing here is the control for the Hanna. It must NOT inject when the pump is not running. How to figure that out? The E-Command-4 doesn't have any specific output for that. The main pump power is not switched; the E-command-4 talks to the pump via some sort of multi-wire low-voltage protocol. The most straightforward thing would be to tap into the salt system's flow switch. This produces a switch closure when water is flowing.
I don't know if I can just connect the Hanna in parallel with the salt controller ( Hayward Aqua Rite ). The Hanna has a "digital input". No info available beyond that.
Don't know if it's 5V logic or 3.3V or....?
I don't know if the Hayward input is referenced to ground, or floating. I'll figure it out by making a little breakout card to go between the Hayward and the flow switch. Then I can stick a meter on it. The input to the Hayward is a 6p4c ( six places, four contacts ) modular phone connector. There are only two wires in the middle of the connector. I just got a baggie of those connectors from Amazon, and I already have the crimping tool.
I read about the Hanna on this forum...